Synagogue for the Arts

The unabashedly modernist Civic Center Synagogue was
designed by William N. Breger and completed in 1967.
While the building is completely out of context among
the 19th-century buildings surrounding it, there is a
certain optimism to its mid-20th-century exhuberance
that makes it seem somehow fitting.

The Civic Center Synagogue was founded by Jacob J. Rosenblum
in 1938 in a loft above a store to serve the area's lawyers,
civil servants and textile workers for weekday services.
The Synagogue constructed its own building at 80 Duane
Street in 1957, but that site was seized by eminent
domain only three years later to make way for the Jacob
Javits Federal Office Building. However, in compensation
for the lost land, the Synaguge was given this plot for
a new building in TriBeCa.

The fortunes of the Synagogue faded with those of
the surrounding city in the 1970s and 1980s, but the
rebirth of the city in the 1990s led to a rebirth of
the congregation. The name was changed to "Synagogue
for the Arts" to reflect the cultural changes
in the neighborhood.